The Greenland Ice Sheet is the second-largest body of ice on Earth. It
covers an area about five times the size of New York State and Kansas
combined, and if it melts completely, oceans could rise by 20 feet.
Coastal communities from Florida to Bangladesh would suffer extensive
damage.
Now, a new study is revealing just how little we understand this northern behemoth.
Led by geophysicist Beata Csatho, PhD, an associate professor of
geology at the University at Buffalo, the research provides what the
authors think is the first comprehensive picture of how Greenland's ice
is vanishing. It suggests that current ice sheet modeling studies are
too simplistic to accurately predict the future contributions of the
entire Greenland Ice Sheet to sea level rise, and that Greenland may
lose ice more rapidly in the near future than previously thought.
"The great importance of our data is that for the first time, we have
a comprehensive picture of how all of Greenland's glaciers have changed
over the past decade," Csatho says.
"This information is crucial for developing and validating numerical
models that predict how the ice sheet may change and contribute to
global sea level over the next few hundred years," says Cornelis J. van
der Veen, PhD, professor in the Department of Geography at the
University of Kansas, who played a key role in interpreting
glaciological changes.
The project was a massive undertaking, using satellite and aerial
data from NASA's ICESat spacecraft and Operation IceBridge field
campaign to reconstruct how the height of the Greenland Ice Sheet
changed at nearly 100,000 locations from 1993 to 2012.
Ice loss takes place in a complex manner, with the ice sheet both melting and calving ice into the ocean.
The study had two major findings:
• First, the scientists were able to provide new estimates of annual ice loss at high spatial resolution.
• Second, the research revealed that current models fail to
accurately capture how the entire Greenland Ice Sheet is changing and
contributing to rising oceans.
The second point is crucial to climate change modelers.
Today's simulations use the activity of four well-studied glaciers --
Jakobshavn, Helheim, Kangerlussuaq and Petermann -- to forecast how the
entire ice sheet will dump ice into the oceans.
But the new research shows that activity at these four locations may
not be representative of what is happening with glaciers across the ice
sheet. In fact, glaciers undergo patterns of thinning and thickening
that current climate change simulations fail to address, Csatho says.
"There are 242 outlet glaciers wider than 1.5 km on the Greenland Ice
Sheet, and what we see is that their behavior is complex in space and
time," Csatho says. "The local climate and geological conditions, the
local hydrology -- all of these factors have an effect. The current
models do not address this complexity."
The team identified areas of rapid shrinkage in southeast Greenland
that today's models don't acknowledge. This leads Csatho to believe that
the ice sheet could lose ice faster in the future than today's
simulations would suggest.
The results will be published on Dec. 15 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
How much ice is the Greenland Ice Sheet losing?
To analyze how the height of the ice sheet was changing, Csatho and
UB research professor and photogrammetrist Anton Schenk, PhD, developed a
computational technique called Surface Elevation Reconstruction And
Change detection to fuse together data from NASA satellite and aerial
missions.
The analysis found that the Greenland Ice Sheet lost about 243 metric
gigatons of ice annually -- equivalent to about 277 cubic kilometers of
ice per year -- from 2003-09, the period for which the team had the
most comprehensive data. This loss is estimated to have added about 0.68
millimeters of water to the oceans annually.
The figures are averages, and ice loss varied from year to year, and from region to region.
Why are today's projections of sea level rise flawed, and how can we fix them?
Glaciers don't just gradually lose mass when the temperature rises.
That's one reason it's difficult to predict their response to global
warming.
In the study, scientists found that some of Greenland's glaciers
thickened even when the temperature rose. Others exhibited accelerated
thinning. Some displayed both thinning and thickening, with sudden
reversals.
As a step toward building better models of sea level rise, the
research team divided Greenland's 242 glaciers into 7 major groups based
on their behavior from 2003-09.
"Understanding the groupings will help us pick out examples of
glaciers that are representative of the whole," Csatho says. "We can
then use data from these representative glaciers in models to provide a
more complete picture of what is happening."
In a new project, she and colleagues are investigating why different
glaciers respond differently to warming. Factors could include the
temperature of the surrounding ocean; the level of friction between a
glacier and the bedrock below; the amount of water under a glacier; and
the geometry of the fjord.
"The physics of these processes are not well understood," Csatho says.
The NASA missions: A colossal undertaking
The study combined data from various NASA missions, including:
• NASA's Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite (ICESat), which
measured the ice sheet's elevation multiple times a year at each of the
nearly 100,000 locations from 2003-09.
• NASA's, massive aerial survey that employs highly specialized
research aircrafts to collect data at less frequent intervals than
ICESat. These missions began measuring the Greenland Ice Sheet's
elevation in 1993. Operation IceBridge was started in 2009 to bridge the
time between ICESat-1 and ICESat-2, and will continue until at least
2017, when NASA's next generation ICESat-2 satellite is expected to come
online.
Csatho says the new study shows why careful monitoring is critical:
Given the complex nature of glacier behavior, good data is crucial to
building better models.
Collaborators
Besides Csatho, Schenk and van der Veen, the project included
additional researchers from the University at Buffalo, Utrecht
University in The Netherlands, the Technical University of Denmark and
Florida Atlantic University.
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